James Blair
James Brown
Abraham Chapline
John Clark
John Crawford
Jared Cowan
John Cowan
John Crow
Azariah Davis
William Fields
David Glenn
Thomas Glenn
Silas Harlan
James Harrod
Thomas Harrod
James Harlan
Evan (or John) Hinton
____ Rees
John Shelp
James Wiley
John Wilson
And 10 others whose names we cannot ascertain, came down the Monongahela and Ohio Rivers in periogues or canoes to the mouth of the Kentucky River, which they ascended…

In two or three weeks this was followed by Isaac Hite’s company of adventurers of 11 men –

Robert Gilbert
James Hamilton
Isaac Hite
James Knox
James McColloch
Alexander Petrey
Jacob Sandusky
James Sandusky
Benjamin Tutt
David Williams
and one other name not preserved.

I know that somewhere, I have seen a complete list of men. Smith surname was not included, so I did not copy. Keep searching.

This list, per several historic researchers, is not complete, but supposedly is the only known list of residents of Fort Harrod. Most of these names are taken from the Draper manuscripts and from various depositions.

I do not believe the Basil Pendergrass citing above is correct, rather Prather. My ancestor Garrett Pendergrass, his wife Margaret nee Elliott and their five children were at the fort, probably arriving in the fall of 1776. Garrett was killed by the Indians outside the fort walls while his family watched in March of 1777, the year of the Bloody Sevens. Garrett Pendergrass and James Harrod were good friends from western PA and he was highly respected (Garrett) by the pioneers and Indians (some) alike. After her husband was killed, Margaret was employed by Gen George Clark by providing sundries to the military, food, shelter, etc. She was at the fort alone with her children, i.e., no husband, for two or three years before she remarried and moved to Louisville.